1. ArchDaily
  2. Public Spaces

Public Spaces: The Latest Architecture and News

The High Line Effect: Transforming Abandoned Infrastructure in the United States

Subscriber Access | 

In the early 2000s, an abandoned rail line in Manhattan sat decaying - a memory from a time when freight trains traveled straight through the city. To most citizens, it was a site destined for demolition. However, a few visionary residents saw an opportunity in this neglected space and advocated to transform it into a public green space for the community. The success of the project seemed to spark a "High Line Effect", inspiring other American cities to pursue civic infrastructure on outdated railways, roadways, and industrial sites.

The High Line Effect: Transforming Abandoned Infrastructure in the United States - Image 6 of 4The High Line Effect: Transforming Abandoned Infrastructure in the United States - Image 10 of 4The High Line Effect: Transforming Abandoned Infrastructure in the United States - Image 2 of 4The High Line Effect: Transforming Abandoned Infrastructure in the United States - Image 9 of 4The High Line Effect: Transforming Abandoned Infrastructure in the United States - More Images+ 6

Pavilions in Cities: 14 Structures that Foster Human Interactions

As dwellers of big cities, we tend to be dragged into a very fast-paced lifestyle. Surrounded by monumental buildings and infrastructure, we can easily lose sight of key spaces that connect us with our neighborhood and provide us with rare moments of peace and enjoyment. Appropriation of the environment we inhabit becomes an uncommon circumstance.

Pavilions in Cities: 14 Structures that Foster Human Interactions - Image 24 of 4Pavilions in Cities: 14 Structures that Foster Human Interactions - Image 23 of 4Pavilions in Cities: 14 Structures that Foster Human Interactions - Image 21 of 4Pavilions in Cities: 14 Structures that Foster Human Interactions - Image 1 of 4Pavilions in Cities: 14 Structures that Foster Human Interactions - More Images+ 23

Urban Renewal from Below: 10 Public Spaces that Reclaim Neglected City Infrastructure

Subscriber Access | 

Urban infrastructure intended for city connectivity disrupts urban patterns and often leaves behind a series of spaces without a properly defined use. Fortunately, the notion of space beneath infrastructure is being redefined, as architects are generating public spaces nestled under flyovers, bridges, and other urban structures. 

Formerly neglected spaces, overlooked or dismissed as mere leftovers of urban planning, are now transformed into dynamic environments for community engagement and artistic expression. Architects, city planners, and the users themselves are embracing the challenge of reclaiming forgotten or underutilized areas and developing innovative solutions, integrating greenery, art installations, and sustainable elements into the urban fabric.

Urban Renewal from Below: 10 Public Spaces that Reclaim Neglected City Infrastructure - Image 1 of 4Urban Renewal from Below: 10 Public Spaces that Reclaim Neglected City Infrastructure - Image 2 of 4Urban Renewal from Below: 10 Public Spaces that Reclaim Neglected City Infrastructure - Image 3 of 4Urban Renewal from Below: 10 Public Spaces that Reclaim Neglected City Infrastructure - Image 4 of 4Urban Renewal from Below: 10 Public Spaces that Reclaim Neglected City Infrastructure - More Images+ 16

The Loeb Fellowship at Harvard GSD Announces the Selection for the Class of 2025

The Harvard Graduate School of Design (Harvard GSD) has announced the Class of 2025 Loeb Fellows. Ten practitioners and activists from around the world have been selected to join the Loeb Fellowship program to expand their careers and advance their programs and initiatives focused on equity, resilience, and collective action.

The ten selected practitioners are mid-career professionals coming from diverse backgrounds. Each one has been recognized for initiating practices that are transforming public spaces and urban infrastructures, addressing public health concerns and environmental injustices, as well as housing needs and efforts to preserve the cultural, natural, and architectural heritage of diverse regions from all continents.

The Loeb Fellowship at Harvard GSD Announces the Selection for the Class of 2025 - Image 1 of 4The Loeb Fellowship at Harvard GSD Announces the Selection for the Class of 2025 - Image 2 of 4The Loeb Fellowship at Harvard GSD Announces the Selection for the Class of 2025 - Image 3 of 4The Loeb Fellowship at Harvard GSD Announces the Selection for the Class of 2025 - Image 4 of 4The Loeb Fellowship at Harvard GSD Announces the Selection for the Class of 2025 - More Images+ 7

Roofs of Trade: A Look at 12 Public Market Architectures

Public Markets are complex cases that beautifully combine an engineering exploration with the instigation of a beneficial public function. In fact, it doesn't take much to designate an open and accessible commercial hub that would encourage commercial exchange and economic development for small or local businesses. All one needs is a lot and a sheltering roof. However, many designers and architects have chosen to take this exercise beyond the social level and into further material and technical exploration. 

Roofs of Trade: A Look at 12 Public Market Architectures - Image 1 of 4Roofs of Trade: A Look at 12 Public Market Architectures - Image 2 of 4Roofs of Trade: A Look at 12 Public Market Architectures - Image 3 of 4Roofs of Trade: A Look at 12 Public Market Architectures - Image 4 of 4Roofs of Trade: A Look at 12 Public Market Architectures - More Images+ 37

Powerhouse Sydney Reveals Heritage Restoration Plans for Australia’s Largest Museum Institution

Subscriber Access | 

Powerhouse, Australia’s largest museum institution dedicated to applied arts design, and technology, has revealed the plans for a comprehensive restoration of its three sites located in Sydney, Australia, in addition to the opening of a new site in Parramatta in Western Sydney in 2025. The Powerhouse Ultimo site contains two heritage-listed buildings: the Ultimo Powerhouse and the Ultimo Post Office. The project for the renovation of this heritage location is led by a team of architects, Durbach Block Jaggers working in partnership with Architectus, Youssofzay + Hart, and landscape architects, Tyrell Studio.

Powerhouse Sydney Reveals Heritage Restoration Plans for Australia’s Largest Museum Institution - Image 1 of 4Powerhouse Sydney Reveals Heritage Restoration Plans for Australia’s Largest Museum Institution - Image 2 of 4Powerhouse Sydney Reveals Heritage Restoration Plans for Australia’s Largest Museum Institution - Image 3 of 4Powerhouse Sydney Reveals Heritage Restoration Plans for Australia’s Largest Museum Institution - Image 4 of 4Powerhouse Sydney Reveals Heritage Restoration Plans for Australia’s Largest Museum Institution - More Images

Concéntrico 10 Demonstrates How to Create Playful Engagement and Welcome Diverse Perspectives

Subscriber Access | 

Architecture and Design Festival Concéntrico celebrates its 10th anniversary from 25 April to 1 May 2024 with an edition that aims to reflect on the impact of the annual festival upon the city of Logroño, Spain, as well as to consider how the city continues to evolve. Through installations, exhibitions, lectures, performances, workshops, and activities, Concéntrico proposes a reflection of the urban environment, welcoming architects and designers to intervene and challenge it while opening conversations about pressing matters.

While the official theme of the festival focused on the future of cities, the invited architects and designers took this suggestion further. Several overarching themes and subjects emerged during this year’s event, from the incorporation of concepts of time, an unusual element to be tacked through temporary installations, to the desire to engage more honestly with a wider public, to listen to their needs and create platforms where diverse perspectives can take center stage.

Concéntrico 10 Demonstrates How to Create Playful Engagement and Welcome Diverse Perspectives - Image 1 of 4Concéntrico 10 Demonstrates How to Create Playful Engagement and Welcome Diverse Perspectives - Image 2 of 4Concéntrico 10 Demonstrates How to Create Playful Engagement and Welcome Diverse Perspectives - Image 3 of 4Concéntrico 10 Demonstrates How to Create Playful Engagement and Welcome Diverse Perspectives - Image 4 of 4Concéntrico 10 Demonstrates How to Create Playful Engagement and Welcome Diverse Perspectives - More Images+ 26

MASSLAB Transforms Bragança Water Treatment Plant into Dynamic Public Space in Portugal

MASSLAB has just won the competition for the new roof of Bragança's Water Treatment Plant in Portugal. Integrating public use of this infrastructure, which until now only serves a functional purpose, the project showcases adding value to existing infrastructure by rethinking them. Blending architecture, landscaping, and urban design to transform this structure into a vibrant public space, MASSLAB seeks to change the perception of water treatment facilities in urban settings. By reimagining the roof as a livable infrastructure, the project transforms the purely functional roof into an engaging and integral part of the urban fabric.

MASSLAB Transforms Bragança Water Treatment Plant into Dynamic Public Space in Portugal - Image 1 of 4MASSLAB Transforms Bragança Water Treatment Plant into Dynamic Public Space in Portugal - Image 2 of 4MASSLAB Transforms Bragança Water Treatment Plant into Dynamic Public Space in Portugal - Image 3 of 4MASSLAB Transforms Bragança Water Treatment Plant into Dynamic Public Space in Portugal - Image 4 of 4MASSLAB Transforms Bragança Water Treatment Plant into Dynamic Public Space in Portugal - More Images+ 3

Concéntrico 10 Opens with 20 Urban Installations to Explore in the Spanish City of Logroño

From April 25 to May 1, 2024, Logroño hosts the tenth edition of Concéntrico, a celebration of urban innovation and transformation. This year, the festival explores the future of cities, incorporating new formats, engaging diverse audiences, and tackling urban challenges through the lens of time as a catalyst for change in design. Featuring 20 interventions and activities involving over 100 professionals from 17 countries, the program encompasses processes such as renaturalizing public spaces, reimagining urban structures, and integrating recycled materials from previous editions.

Additionally, collaborations with educational centers ensure a lasting impact beyond the festival, fostering new collective practices in public spaces. Special projects such as  "The street in 10 years" or initiatives involving students and pupils from local schools and educational centers further enrich the festival's engagement with communities across Spain.

Concéntrico 10 Opens with 20 Urban Installations to Explore in the Spanish City of Logroño - Image 39 of 4Concéntrico 10 Opens with 20 Urban Installations to Explore in the Spanish City of Logroño - Image 18 of 4Concéntrico 10 Opens with 20 Urban Installations to Explore in the Spanish City of Logroño - Image 47 of 4Concéntrico 10 Opens with 20 Urban Installations to Explore in the Spanish City of Logroño - Image 63 of 4Concéntrico 10 Opens with 20 Urban Installations to Explore in the Spanish City of Logroño - More Images+ 141

Public Spaces and Their Key Role in Building Climate Resilience in the US.

Subscriber Access | 

Social infrastructure encompasses the resources and services that allow the creation of communal bonds and social connections. Within the built environment, it manifests through public spaces like parks, libraries, and community centers alongside threshold spaces such as public transportation stops.

These public social spaces play a crucial role in strengthening communities and, in turn, their ability to respond to catastrophic climate-related events. They can provide physical shelter to the populations most vulnerable to these events and foster resilient networks of people who can more quickly recover. Given the escalating frequency of extreme weather events in the United States due to climate change and its social infrastructure inadequacies, examining public spaces as a critical tool for climate resilience becomes vital.

Public Spaces and Their Key Role in Building Climate Resilience in the US. - Image 1 of 4Public Spaces and Their Key Role in Building Climate Resilience in the US. - Image 2 of 4Public Spaces and Their Key Role in Building Climate Resilience in the US. - Image 3 of 4Public Spaces and Their Key Role in Building Climate Resilience in the US. - Image 4 of 4Public Spaces and Their Key Role in Building Climate Resilience in the US. - More Images

Interview with Charu Kokate of Safdie Architects: Designing for Community

Subscriber Access | 

Safdie Architects has officially opened the new campus headquarters for Surbana Jurong, Singapore’s leading architecture, urban design, and infrastructure firm. The project expands Safdie Architects’ vision of 'for everyone a garden' into the workplace with a design that draws on the tranquility of the site’s previously undeveloped natural setting to foster shared moments of engagement and creativity. Achieving Green Mark (Super Low Energy) certification, the campus is the flagship development of the emerging Jurong Innovation District, envisioned as the first business park set in a tropical rainforest.

The development marks Safdie Architects' sixth project in Singapore and enhances the firm's prominent built portfolio in the city-state, which already includes Marina Bay Sands, Sky Habitat, and the Jewel at Changi Airport. On the occasion of the opening, ArchDaily spoke to Charu Kokate, Partner at Safdie Architects, who leads efforts in the Singapore region, about the firm's unique development footprint and building philosophy.

Interview with Charu Kokate of Safdie Architects: Designing for Community - Image 1 of 4Interview with Charu Kokate of Safdie Architects: Designing for Community - Image 2 of 4Interview with Charu Kokate of Safdie Architects: Designing for Community - Image 3 of 4Interview with Charu Kokate of Safdie Architects: Designing for Community - Image 4 of 4Interview with Charu Kokate of Safdie Architects: Designing for Community - More Images+ 2

Paris 2024 Olympics: Iconic Landmarks to Host Sporting Events

As France prepares for the XXXIII Olympic Games, Paris plans to showcase its rich cultural legacy. The 2024 Olympics, which will begin on July 25, 2024, are set to be a momentous occasion for the city as it anticipates competitors and spectators worldwide. Embracing a “pioneering approach,” Paris 2024 aims to reimagine the Olympic experience by departing from the traditional stadium venues and “integrating sports into the fabric of the city.” From the iconic Grand Palais to the Eiffel Tower, the Gardens of Versailles, and the famous La Concorde, world-famous landmarks are set to host the 2024 games.

Paris 2024 Olympics: Iconic Landmarks to Host Sporting Events - Image 1 of 4Paris 2024 Olympics: Iconic Landmarks to Host Sporting Events - Image 2 of 4Paris 2024 Olympics: Iconic Landmarks to Host Sporting Events - Image 3 of 4Paris 2024 Olympics: Iconic Landmarks to Host Sporting Events - Image 4 of 4Paris 2024 Olympics: Iconic Landmarks to Host Sporting Events - More Images+ 3

The Urban Transformation of Medellín: A Case Study

CityMakers, The Global Community of Architects Who Learn from Exemplary Cities and Their Makers, is working with Archdaily to publish a series of articles about Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam. The authors are the architects, urban planners, and/or strategists behind the projects that have transformed these three cities and are studied in the "Schools of Cities" and "Documentary Courses" made by CityMakers. On this occasion, Victor Restrepo, Coordinator of CityMakers in Medellin, presents his article "Medellin: A Case Study".

Medellín stands as an inspiring example for many cities worldwide. It is a city that transitioned from deep collective fear to hopeful enthusiasm for urban and social life characterized by quality and coexistence. The city's crisis has always been associated with violence and drug trafficking. However, this crisis is more structural and profound, it responds to many more factors, some of which are associated with the accelerated growth of its population, as in many Latin American cities.

The Urban Transformation of Medellín: A Case Study - Image 1 of 4The Urban Transformation of Medellín: A Case Study - Image 2 of 4The Urban Transformation of Medellín: A Case Study - Image 3 of 4The Urban Transformation of Medellín: A Case Study - Image 4 of 4The Urban Transformation of Medellín: A Case Study - More Images+ 7

Affordable Play: 4 Examples of Low-Budget Community Playgrounds

Subscriber Access | 

The idea of a community or public playground is about creating an accessible recreational space for all. However, in many cases, initiating a playground project might fail due to insufficient funds or regulations/restrictions. The first challenge is largely to set the project in motion and, most importantly, get the community’s positive reception and, if possible, its involvement, thus ensuring the project's success and sustainability. 

Affordable Play: 4 Examples of Low-Budget Community Playgrounds - Image 1 of 4Affordable Play: 4 Examples of Low-Budget Community Playgrounds - Image 2 of 4Affordable Play: 4 Examples of Low-Budget Community Playgrounds - Image 3 of 4Affordable Play: 4 Examples of Low-Budget Community Playgrounds - Image 4 of 4Affordable Play: 4 Examples of Low-Budget Community Playgrounds - More Images+ 11

A Unique Approach to Creating Public Spaces: In Conversation with Alejandro Haiek

Subscriber Access | 

Architecture practices usually start their design process with a client, who provides a program and a site. Alejandro Haiek, founder of The Public Machinery, approaches things differently. The Public Machinery describes itself as a network of architects and designers working collectively, actively observing, imagining, and proposing public urban interventions themselves. Their proposals are at the intersection of art, architecture, and engineering and weave community engagement, ecology, and new technologies into innovative forms of social infrastructure. They secure funding through research and public grants, enabling them to create public spaces that defy expectations in both their design process and in the form their projects take.

A Unique Approach to Creating Public Spaces: In Conversation with Alejandro Haiek  - Image 1 of 4A Unique Approach to Creating Public Spaces: In Conversation with Alejandro Haiek  - Image 2 of 4A Unique Approach to Creating Public Spaces: In Conversation with Alejandro Haiek  - Image 3 of 4A Unique Approach to Creating Public Spaces: In Conversation with Alejandro Haiek  - Image 4 of 4A Unique Approach to Creating Public Spaces: In Conversation with Alejandro Haiek  - More Images+ 5

The Barcelona Model: Public Space as a Synonym for Urban Adaptation

CityMakers, The Global Community of Architects Who Learn from Exemplary Cities and Their Makers, is working with Archdaily to publish a series of articles about Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam. The authors are the architects, urban planners, and/or strategists behind the projects that have transformed these three cities and are studied in the "Schools of Cities" and "Documentary Courses" made by CityMakers. On this occasion, Jaume Barnada, coordinator of the award-winning Climate Shelters project in Barcelona schools and speaker at the "Schools of Cities", presents his article "Barcelona, the public place as a synonym for the adaptation of the built city."

Cities are dense, built spaces in which pavements have been efficiently imposed on the natural soil. Cities like Barcelona have almost 75% of the land paved and waterproof. Without a doubt, it is an excess to reverse at a time of climate emergency, where we must reconnect with nature. Oriol Bohigas [1] told us that good urbanization had paved the squares of Mediterranean cities and that no one wanted to live in a mudhole. I'm sure he was right. Also, he taught us that the green and, consequently, the natural soil had to have dimension and especially an urban position. Squares are squares and parks are parks, and each space has a type of project. Today, concepts are too frequently confused when urbanizing public places and consequently, we find projects that blur the model.

The Barcelona Model: Public Space as a Synonym for Urban Adaptation - Image 1 of 4The Barcelona Model: Public Space as a Synonym for Urban Adaptation - Image 2 of 4The Barcelona Model: Public Space as a Synonym for Urban Adaptation - Image 3 of 4The Barcelona Model: Public Space as a Synonym for Urban Adaptation - Image 4 of 4The Barcelona Model: Public Space as a Synonym for Urban Adaptation - More Images+ 3

Eyes on the Street: Jane Jacobs’ Concept and Contemporary Residential Architecture in Brazil

The concept of "eyes on the street" is perhaps the most famous within architectural and urban literature when it comes to urban security. Jane Jacobs uses this expression to refer to people who - consciously or unconsciously - use public spaces or observe them from their homes, generating natural surveillance. A movement that, within our discipline, is encouraged both through quality public spaces and through the powerful relationship between the public and private created through building facades. Advocating for this daily control, Jacobs believes in a way of making architecture and cities that condemns excessive verticalization, reinforced by isolated buildings and single-use ones that deny contact with the street

Eyes on the Street: Jane Jacobs’ Concept and Contemporary Residential Architecture in Brazil - Image 1 of 4Eyes on the Street: Jane Jacobs’ Concept and Contemporary Residential Architecture in Brazil - Image 2 of 4Eyes on the Street: Jane Jacobs’ Concept and Contemporary Residential Architecture in Brazil - Image 3 of 4Eyes on the Street: Jane Jacobs’ Concept and Contemporary Residential Architecture in Brazil - Image 4 of 4Eyes on the Street: Jane Jacobs’ Concept and Contemporary Residential Architecture in Brazil - More Images+ 5

How Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam Have Generated Public Space Where It Seemed Impossible

CityMakers, The Global Community of Architects Learning from Model Cities and Their Makers is working with Archdaily to publish a series of articles about Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam. The authors are the architects, urban planners, and/or strategists behind the projects that have transformed these three cities and are known in the "Schools of Cities" and "Documentary Courses" made by CityMakers.

There is currently a broad consensus on the importance of public space in the city. Although it may seem quite logical, its significance is not as old as human settlements, which have existed for millennia. The Athens Charter, written just 91 years ago, did not speak so much about the city as a place to live but as a functional machine. Almost a century later, the paradigm has shifted: the city is, above all, its public space. But what happens when public space is threatened by car proliferation, insecurity, or even water?

How Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam Have Generated Public Space Where It Seemed Impossible - Image 1 of 4How Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam Have Generated Public Space Where It Seemed Impossible - Image 2 of 4How Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam Have Generated Public Space Where It Seemed Impossible - Image 3 of 4How Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam Have Generated Public Space Where It Seemed Impossible - Image 4 of 4How Barcelona, Medellin, and Rotterdam Have Generated Public Space Where It Seemed Impossible - More Images+ 3